Album
Superb
2025 · Funk / Soul
5 collectors on Gatefold own this

Superb is a Soul & Funk album by Surprise Chef, originally released in 2025. On Gatefold: 9 pressings tracked, owned by 5 collectors.
About
“We decided that what we may have neglected is spontaneity and lightne,” Surprise Chef guitarist Lachlan Stuckey tells Apple Music about the jazz-funk-soul instrumental group’s approach to their fourth album. “We wanted to make a concerted effort of being more spontaneou,” he says—a marked change from their typically meticulous approach of planning every minute detail. For a band that records live to tape, that meant not doing 40 takes of each song until it was perfect, but focusing instead on capturing the right energy. Agonizing over every little decision was also out the window. “Any time we’d catch ourselves debating the merits of an idea, we’d stop and go, what feels superb? So when we got to the end of the record and were like, what’s the album called, it just felt most appropriate to identify the record as such.” Also important to shaping the LP was a comment from Danny Akalepse, co-owner of Surprise Chef’s record label, Big Crown Record. “He’d always lamented that we don’t make music he can play when he’s DJing at a party, so we were like, all right, here it i,” says Stuckey. While “fundamental” influences such as The J.B.’, David Axelrod, Isaac Haye, and El Michels Affair are still in play, the Melbourne group also leaned into early-2000s R&B and hip-hop, posing the question, “What would it sound like if we filtered The Neptune, Just Blaze, and DJ Premier through what we do?” Here, Stuckey takes Apple Music through <i>Superb</i>, track by track. <b>“Sleep Dreams”</b> “A lot of the titles tend to come from in-joke. Hudson [Whitlock, percussion] thought the expression ‘sweet dreams’ was ‘sleep dream.’ So it’s been a bit of a running joke in the band that when we’re on tour, at the end of the night everyone say, ‘Sleep dream.’ That applied to this song because of the dreamy lullaby kind of atmosphere that Hudson was going for when he wrote it.” <b>“Bully Ball”</b> “Bully ball is a framework of basketball that is often seen in ’80s and ’90s NBA stuff; it represents the physical style of play that’s more or less been phased out. Initially the working title was ‘Bank Breaker,’ and whilst we’re really influenced by ’60s and ’70s soundtracks and blaxploitation stuff, we don’t want our music to be necessarily placed in that kind of category, and we felt the title ‘Bank Breaker’ was a little too car-chase funk for our liking. We felt like the tough nature of this tune could be considered as emblematic for this specific style of basketball play.” <b>“Body Slam”</b> “Again, really just trying to lean into those sensibilities of hip-hop from the late ’90s—really tough drums and an aggressive bassline. That is something we really dig from that era, those hip-hop beats that are raw and aggressive. So that was our opportunity to include that particular flavor.” <b>“Consulate Case”</b> “We played in Delhi a couple of weeks before we started recording. And we bought a lot of Bollywood records when we were there, all these killer records from the ’70s and ’80. We incorporated a lot of those influences into the tune—the kind of out-of-control synthesizer stuff and the funky drum.” <b>“Dangerous”</b> “We wanted to incorporate a lot of the sensibilities of Barry White’s arranging on that song. Barry White had some really interesting conventions that he applied when he was producing Love Unlimited and Tom Brock and some of the records he made in the ’70. And we love those record. Big Barry White fan.” <b>“Websites”</b> “We have this expression, ‘the bone zone,’ which is the mental state you get into after many hours in the studio and it’s late at night. You become a little bit uninhibited, almost disconnected from the music because you’re so exhausted or wired. We saved this song specifically for that moment. We turned the lights off, lit some candle, and recorded this weird dedication to the humble website. Websites don’t get the love and respect they deserve anymore.” <b>“Fare Evader”</b> “We wrote that when we all swapped instruments; it was the kind of thing we were open to doing moving into this record to create a different energy. It was the first song we wrote for <i>Superb</i> and I think it set the blueprint in a way. We jammed out this little idea and went, great, cool, done. We’re not going to play this anymore until the day we record it. We’re not going to overthink it. So I think ‘Fare Evader’ set us on the track of how we were going to approach the rest of the material.” <b>“Tag Dag”</b> “A tag dag is what you call someone when the tag of their T-shirt is sticking out. Jethro [Curtin, keys] and I collect a lot of independent, private pre, low budget soul and disco music from the ’70s and early ’80. The kind of music where someone’s trying to make a record that sounds like Chic but they don’t really have the budget or personnel to make that happen, so they try and make something that ends up completely different, like on a whole different bent. That was the kind of influence we were trying to incorporate with ‘Tag Dag.’” <b>“Plumb Tuckered”</b> “This came from the mind of Andrew Congue, our drummer. Often his demos have lots of ideas in them, lots of different layer, and a lot of the layers don’t really make sense to me, but there’s three or four things going on that are awesome. So we took his demo and got rid of a bunch of stuff and zoomed in on certain thing. He was approaching that from a really Neptune, Timbaland, Just Blaze kind of framework, bumpin’ early-2000s hip-hop style.” <b>“Dreamer’s Disease”</b> “That was a tune that Carl [Lindeberg] our bass player brought in. We ended up pushing it in a little bit more of this kind of dreamy soul direction. That was the title he had for it, and I think that refers to the condition of being a dreamer; having that disease of always thinking about this and that and the other. I reckon Carl’s got dreamer’s disease, he’s always thinking out loud about this or that.” <b>“Slippery Dip”</b> .
via Apple Music
The Clerk says
The Clerk knows this whole record — the pressing quirks, the credits, the take.
Tracklist
- 1Sleep Dreams4:15
- 2Bully Ball3:23
- 3Body Slam2:57
- 4Consulate Case3:27
- 5Dangerous2:28
- 6Websites4:30
- 7Fare Evader2:45
- 8Tag Dag4:25
- 9Plumb Tuckered2:39
- 10Dreamer's Disease3:34
- 11Slippery Dip5:15
Sound DNA
- Soul & Funk
- Funk
- warm
- laid-back
- groovy
Credits
The people behind it.
Performers
- Carl LindebergBASS GUITAR
- Andrew ConguesDRUM MACHINE PERCUSSION DRUMS
- Lachlan StuckeyGUITAR PERCUSSION
- Jethro CurtinKEYBOARDS VIBRAPHONE FLUTE
- Hudson WhitlockVIBRAPHONE MARIMBA PERCUSSION
- Carl LindbergBASS GUITAR
5 collectors on Gatefold own this · 9 pressings tracked on Gatefold
Start your shelf.
Track your pressings of Superb, get the Clerk's take, and see what the record is worth — free.
Start your shelf →Free forever. Works with 10 records or 10,000.
